152 
PATHOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF LONDON, 
Berthollet and Paulini have observed the milk green, and 
it is supposed this is due to a mixture of blue and yellow 
milk. Fuchs believes there is a coi’taneous existence of the 
blue and yellow vibrio. 
16, Upper Woburn Place. 9 
(To be continued .) 
PATHOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF LONDON. 
Lately at a meeting of the Pathological Society of London, 
Mr. Partridge exhibited nearly a dozen Renal Calculi 
taken from an ox. They varied in size, the largest being 
about the size of a small nut. 
From an analysis made by Mr. Bloxam, of King’s Col- 
lege, they were found to consist principally of carbonate of 
lime, and albuminous matter, with a trace of alumina. 
Also, a Double (Esophagus of a Sheep, which, on a 
post-mortem examination, was found to commence at the 
top of the gullet, and extend to the entrance of the stomach. 
No symptoms were noticed to arrest attention before death, 
and the age of the animal was not known by Mr. Partridge. 
Scabs on the Mucous Membrane of the Colon in 
the Horse, associated with submucous Cysts, con- 
taining calcareous particles. — The horse in which 
these lesions of the intestines were found was old, emaciated, 
and low, suffering from herpes phlyctaenodes, a very com- 
mon affection in the horse, associated generally with no con- 
stitutional disturbance. On post-mortem inspection, the 
posterior lobe of the right lung was found hepatized ; and 
over a very large surface of the mucous membrane of the 
transverse colon, especially corresponding with the longi- 
tudinal muscular bands, were dark-brown or greenish- 
coloured scabs, of considerable thickness, and very firm ; the 
membrane beneath them was tumefied and inflamed. In the 
sub-mucous tissue were discovered numerous white little 
cysts, containing spherical, granular, dark-coloured, earthy 
masses, which were dissolved with effervescence by hydro- 
chloric acid. These were in many particulars similar to the 
calcareous bodies met with in the choroid plexuses, differing 
from them in being tuberous, more opaque, and containing 
less phosphates, and more carbonates. — Lancet . 
